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They Don't Read!

November 13, 2009

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Over the years I’ve often taught Edward Bellamy’s classic 19th century utopian novel Looking Backward. It’s a blistering critique of Gilded Age America and a creative imagining of a future in which work, social class, gender relations, and the political economy have been radically reconfigured. The novel is provocative and rich in ideas, and its premises spark great debate. What it’s not is a page-turner. Most of the book is an extended lecture interspersed with occasional questions and a contrived (and mawkish) romance. Students sometimes complain that the book is “boring.” I’ll take that — they have to have read it to render such a judgment.

Any book we assign is useful only insofar as students actually crack the cover and consume its contents. One of the biggest complaints one hears in the hallways and faculty lounges of American colleges concerns literary dieting. The professorial mantra of the 21st century is: “They just don’t read.” All manner of villains emerge to explain students’ repulsion toward reading: Internet surfing, video games, cell phone obsession, campus partying, over-caffeination, lack of intellectual curiosity…. When all else fails, professors whet their knives to slaughter tried-and-true scapegoats: television and inadequate high school preparation. Here’s a tip about why they don’t read: they never did! In previous articles I’ve noted that instructors often mistakenly assume that all students share their zest for learning. Alas, often we are but credit-accumulation obstacles that students must dodge.

There’s been no Golden Age of student reading in my lifetime — not when I was a student, a high school teacher, a community college instructor, a lecturer at an elite institution, or a prof at a state university. Move on. Think like Edward Bellamy; he was a utopian, but he was no fool. His ideal world did not rely upon people’s good natures; it was structured to remove choice from the equation. Everyone had to work — not a bad way to approach reading in your classrooms. If you want students to read, make it hard (or impossible) to avoid.

Step one is to assign appropriate material. Just because you found an 800-page specialty tome to be spellbinding doesn’t mean your students will. Don’t expect undergrads to get excited about most journal articles either; you’ll need to teach them how to approach such dense reading. Seek material that is appropriate for what students need to know — the more engagingly written and short, the better. When you can, feed them small doses of the stuff they’re used to seeing, such as Web sites, blogs and graphic novels.

Writing assignments help ensure reading (and kill two skill birds with one stone). These need not be elaborate. In reasonably-sized classes I require periodic two- to three-page papers for most reading assignments. Four or five questions appear on the course Web site and students must write about one of them. The list has the added benefit of providing discussion fodder on the day the assignment is due. It also allows me to monitor student writing and gives me clues about what I must address before a major assignment comes along.

I’m hearing virtual protests — “That’s all well and good for a small class, but what if I have a lecture hall filled with 150 students?” If you have teaching assistants, that helps, but even if you don’t there are ways to assign writing without spending each week reading 450 pages times the number of classes you teach.

One way is to read papers carefully only a few times during the semester. Do it early on and send papers back to students with a grade and lots of red circles. This sends the message that you expect the assignments to be completed and done well. This allows you to skim papers and make random remarks throughout the semester. Sometime before midterm and finals do another close read. Develop a grading or points system and don’t accept late work if you have a big class. This drives home the lesson that deadlines are deadlines. (“Sorry Charley, but you just forfeited five points.”)

A more devious way to accomplish the same thing is to give weekly writing assignments and tell students you will collect them randomly during the semester. Make it really random, as in collecting several weeks in a row and then neglecting to do so in non-discernible patterns. I’m personally not comfortable with a controlled-terror approach to teaching but I’ve seen it work. One panic button I do push is to walk into class and announce a two-minute paper in which students must write what they learned from the reading assignment.

When I have multiple large classes in a semester I sometimes opt for a milder variant of the “gotcha” approach — I collect and keep track of who hasn’t handed in work, but I don’t grade every assignment. (A word of caution: Students tend not to like systems in which professors merely "check off" their work, so you ought to grade a few.) Another variant is to grade different students’ papers each batch. Choose from the pile until you’ve read each student’s work at least twice during a semester.

Another way to reinforce the need to read is to construct lectures and discussions in such a way that reading is a prerequisite for comprehension. One should allude to materials in the reading — if you don’t, expect complaints that you made students buy things you never used — but don’t waste class time with a point-by-point rehash of the assignment. I often clue students about what they need to pay close attention to in order to understand an upcoming lesson. In that lesson I entertain questions about the reading, but I seldom walk through it.

In like fashion, write lectures around reading concepts and content, or spin them in a new direction, but don’t repeat what the readings say. This works in many disciplines. Engineering professors can build demonstrations, labs, and lectures around concepts and formulae that students must first master from their texts; legal scholars can assign case law that must be read in order to follow the logic of their lectures; management professors can sprinkle their lectures with terms whose meanings are explained in their readings; and so on.

If you give exams, make certain that parts of those exams are based on material that could only have been gotten from the reading. (I warn students that I will do this, lest I have to field “We didn’t go over this in class” complaints, and I don’t have to deliver a “This isn’t high school” retort.) I don’t recommend basing an entire exam on out-of-class reading — that’s a correspondence course. Nor should one base questions on obscure, arcane, or hopelessly complex material, but the basics are fair game.

Research and reflection papers should definitely require student writers to grapple with assigned readings. This can be done simply by inserting a line in the instructions such as: “Your paper must draw upon assigned readings (specify which ones) in a substantial manner that demonstrates your mastery of them and your ability to synthesize these with outside sources. Papers that fail to reference these works will be marked down accordingly.”

There are scads of other ways to encourage reading. Discussion leaders can give quizzes, assign student presenters for each reading, or hand out advance questions in the form of a single sheet with blank spaces for really short responses. You can design tasks no more demanding than generating a list, applying one equation, or explaining a solitary concept. I’ve asked students to read material until they understand several identified ideas and can explain how they apply to examples that do not come from the reading. It really doesn’t matter what you devise so as that you do apply a stick to go with the reading carrot.

I'm sure some of you are thinking “But what if students don’t know how to read critically? Isn’t all of this wasted on them?” Perhaps; and perhaps this is a way to separate learners from the halt and lame. Two quick thoughts — first, we should stop moaning about what students don’t know and teach them where they are. Thinking, reading, and writing critically should be a basic component of 100-level classes. Second, the right to an education isn’t the same as a guarantee of success. More on such matters in a future article. For now, let’s think like Edward Bellamy and remove non-reading as an option.

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Comments on They Don't Read!

  • Good Advice, even though . . .
  • Posted by Muriel Slash on November 13, 2009 at 8:00am EST
  • I disagree with Professor Sloan on teaching utopian nonsense like Looking Backward. Students want to learn about the real world, not waste time on utopian fantasies.

    I do like his use of the terms "carrot" and "stick." Most students are not naturally motivated. They must be motivated from without. Only in a utopia would they be self-starters. Most college students are preparing for the workforce where they will be "carroted" with the lure of job security and "sticked" with the probability of none. Globalization is imposing more discipline on workers all the time. The ONLY balm to that is mindless consumerism. Let's educate them accordingly: How, as managers themselves someday, to cater to consumers on the one hand while ripping them off with the other. None of this utopianism whereby workers/consumers get the idea that they can participate effectively and mindfully--and in solidarity--in how they produce and consume.

  • More ideas
  • Posted by Ken McElrath , CEO at Skoodat on November 13, 2009 at 8:15am EST
  • In principal, these ideas have worked with some success in my classroom. My mods look like this: I post readings in pdf format on my class site in order of their due date. Kids can work ahead. Only three out of 15 are more than 5 pages in length. I then ask the students to right one paragraph about thoughts stimulated by the reading. In addition, they must use the class site to respond with comments to at least three of their classmates' thoughts. This encourages a dialog that improves comprehension. Some semesters the kids really get into it. Other semesters are lackluster. Different classes seem to have different personalities.

  • Posted by David on November 13, 2009 at 9:45am EST
  • Only 3 assignments are longer than FIVE pages? I've taught at a state university, a fine arts school, a little Ivy, and a media school and I've never assigned anything as short as that. Heck, I've had 4th graders at summer camp do more than five pages of reading in class.

    This has got to be a discipline-specific thing. Do you teach math or science? Teaching those concepts takes less page count. Are you adapting to the needs of students impoverished by their high school system, such as at a community college?

  • Posted by Amy on November 13, 2009 at 1:30pm EST
  • I'm not sure about the claim that it's always been this way. My older colleagues all say they've noticed a significant drop in reading, and in reading skills, in the last 15 years. As a young prof, I have to say that this is one of the things that's frustrating me to the point of making me consider getting out of academia. I've tried quizzes, short writing assignments, surprise in-class writing assignments, exams based solely on passages from the text, etc., and none of it seems to matter. The students just do the minimum amount of reading they need to do to complete the assignment with a passing grade. The only thing I've found that works a little is to photocophy a reading and bring it to class for the students to read in class. Of course, this eats up huge amounts of time and we can only read very short things that way, but it's the only thing that gets them to read something from beginning to end. I'll try some of the suggestions in this article, though. I appreciate that the author gives techniques for dealing with large numbers of students; this has been the main thing preventing me from coming up with more difficult assignments.

  • Posted by Brandi , English on November 13, 2009 at 2:00pm EST
  • In order to encourage my students to read the required material, I implement the following:
    1. They must print off and annotate the required reading material for daily work points (highlighting/underlining AND comments in the margins).
    2. If the students aren't volunteering their thoughts in class discussions about the reading material, then for the next essay I tell them that the way to get credit for attendance is to speak up "voluntarily and eagerly". They always laugh about me saying "eagerly," but it works!
    3. They must use the required reading material as outside sources in their own essays. Of course this sounds limiting and students' essays sometimes feel somewhat forced when trying to include them, but, for the most part, it proves that they have read the material and that they understand how the essay's concepts relate to the assignment.

  • Read on
  • Posted by George T. Karnezis on November 13, 2009 at 7:15pm EST
  • "One way is to read papers carefully only a few times during the semester. Do it early on and send papers back to students with a grade and lots of red circles. This sends the message that you expect the assignments to be completed and done well. This allows you to skim papers and make random remarks throughout the semester."

    It's the unashamed expression of such "advice" that makes me glad I took early retirement from college teaching. I can't imagine a more fatuous wrongheaded compromise and would ask the writer if he'd be happy to send his kids to a college where such practices were encouraged. I certainly wouldn't.

    Despite some commonplace sensible observations here, there's considerable rubbish. But then, Weir's deep sigh ("'twas ever thus") is enough to alert any reader that any useful critical comments would be wasted on him.

    "Another way to reinforce the need to read is to construct lectures and discussions in such a way that reading is a prerequisite for comprehension. One should allude to materials in the reading"

    Well, duh. Just who on earth does Weir presume to be addressing? Has the legendary indifference of so many in higher education to teaching become so prevalent that such "advice" needs uttering? Am I the only one embarrassed by such "mentoring" that is not unlike advice to divers being urged to "hold their breath" before they hit the water? What is IHE thinking when it allows the broadcast of such stuff? Want one more?

    "If you give exams, make certain that parts of those exams are based on material that could only have been gotten from the reading."

    Thanks for sharing, Rob. By the way, the "only" should properly follow "gotten." Be sure to circle such syntactical misplacements in your students' writing.

  • Posted by 3rd year undergrad , sociology on November 13, 2009 at 10:30pm EST
  • I think it's really great when I'm assigned multiple (3-6) short articles, maybe 5-10 pages each for a class every week. Clarke's Deviant Behavior reader is a nice example - nearly all the articles we've read are very short, concise and lucid. They reinforce theoretical frameworks through multiple case studies - it's hard to get bored.

    I also liked for another class how we had two readers: one that was an anthology of seminal pieces in a specific sub-field, and another that basically summarized the terse writing of those early sociologists.

    I also like when we're assigned around 5 short-ish papers for the semester, instead of a 15 page one at the end. The short-ish papers (around 5 pages) would have really specific prompts which basically test us on our understanding of texts. They'd be like "compare Marx and Durkheim on an issue," or "What would Weber say about early feminism?"

  • Decent Enough Advice
  • Posted by CC Prof on November 13, 2009 at 10:30pm EST
  • "One way is to read papers carefully only a few times during the semester. Do it early on and send papers back to students with a grade and lots of red circles. This sends the message that you expect the assignments to be completed and done well. This allows you to skim papers and make random remarks throughout the semester."

    George objected to such advice, but I take it that such assignments would really be in addition to the closely graded writing assignments that the author normally assigns. I have a colleague who does something like this in one of his courses. He has one-page papers due each week. These papers cover the readings. He grades the first few closely, but after that he just uses them to make sure that the students are doing the reading and does not grade them closely. They still have to write some longer papers that are closely graded. I'm always amazed at how much work he gets out of his students in that course.

    Why is this such a bad practice? Is everything that a student writes supposed to be closely read? What about finals? I'm pretty sure that many final exam essays are not closely graded. I'm fairly certain that some are hardly read at all. Is that shameful? If so, why?

    As for Amy's comments, I also frequently use handouts that we read from in class. But I teach philosophy, and sometimes a few pages of selected text can go a long ways. In the introductory courses, I feel that one of my jobs is to teach my students how to read such texts. I don't see how I can do that without closely reading some of the material together with them in class.

    In my History of Western Philosophy courses, I get two kinds of students: those who read and those who don't. The one who read earn A's and B's. The ones who don't get C's or worse. Since about half the class reads, sometimes eagerly, I don't feel a pressing need to prod them.

  • Reading and Writing again
  • Posted by George T. Karnezis on November 14, 2009 at 5:45am EST
  • OK CC Prof, I'm not trying to outlaw some casual attention to some student writing, nor do I expect absolutely perfect prose on exams. My point was the blase tone and temperament of this piece, the announcement of the commonplace as if it were news, and the gamesmanship mentality it displayed struck me as fairly juvenile and patronizing. (A grade and lots of red circles on student writing? What does that teach students? The teacher as cop and the student left to guess on how to improve? What about comments, hm? Are you teaching students not to expect them? Grade is all that matters? The fewer red circles the better? What about god stars? )

    The sad aspect of this piece is also that instead of protesting the large classes which inhibit the kind of meaningful attention that student writing should receive, it plays the coping game (ya know, make those few red circles) and makes such coping a clever virtue. Advice like this is not really advice or mentoring. It's compromising in the worst sense of that word, and also further evidence of the impoverished state of of teaching conditions, particularly for those who care about making a difference in , not merely correcting, student writing.

    Weir says "Thinking, reading, and writing critically should be a basic component of 100-level classes." Well, yep, right on, but why that component should be reserved for 100 level classes escapes me. More importantly though: what percentage of teachers in these 100 level courses are full time? And what percentage of the total college population consists of students taking such courses? Does the educational system reward a commitment to such courses, and the "reading and writing critically" component they contain? Or is it the case that such a commitment is generally devalued with temp appointments and reduced status?

    Finally, we're asked by CC prof : "I'm pretty sure that many final exam essays are not closely graded. I'm fairly certain that some are hardly read at all. Is that shameful?" How is one to answer this, really? Remember the response long ago to Senator McCarthy? "Have you no shame,sir?" Apparently not. Doubtless many students, beset with higher tuition and increased debt will find CC prof''s observation interesting, if not embarrassing. I once had a very cynical colleague who would periodically claim that "Education is the only commodity for which, it seems, students are willing to pay more to get less." Maybe he'd say that for some teachers, they expect more for doing less?

  • Grading Final Exams
  • Posted by CC Prof on November 14, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • George has responded that it is shameful to not closely grade final exam essays. Does this mean that one must mark them as one would during the semester? I closely grade papers during the semester, including in-class essays. This means the I spend a bit of time reading them and writing comments. However, I don't write many comments at all on the final exams for the simple reason that the students do not collect them. Why would I write comments that won't be read? I would agree with George that such essays should be read, and I do do that.

    However, I work at an institution that only awards full grades with no pluses or minuses. So, if I have a student squarely in the B range, for example, and it becomes clear that I'm looking at a final exam squarely in the B range, then I'm not going to read that essay as closely as I would the essay of a student on the border between grades. George is offering a bit of a false dichotomy. We can either grade the papers seriously or not at all. Obviously, there is a wide range of attention that be paid to student writing. If students ask for comments on a final essay, then I will take the time to type up detailed comments. Such students deserve extra feedback.

    Finally, my students don't find this practice embarrassing at all. I tell them that they have to ask for comments on the final exam essay.

  • Report Resource and Response
  • Posted by Patrica Schade , Asst. Professor, Developmental Studies at Northern Essex Community College on November 15, 2009 at 1:30pm EST
  • In response to Amy's statement that her more seasoned colleagues think that student reading has worsened over the years. Unfortunately, they are right. According to the International Reading Association's "Nation Report Card", reading scores have declined in the United States for 12th graders since 1992. The results are from 2005, released in 2006. We've lost ground on almost all fronts, but most alarmingly in male students and minority students."Except for the highest-performing students (90th percentile), declines were seen at all levels of performance since 1992. Further, the percentage of students performing at or above Basic level decreased from 80 in 1992 to 73 in 2005, and the percentage of students performing at or above the Proficient level decreased from 40 to 35." The entire report can be read at: http://www.reading.org/General/Publications/ReadingToday/RTY-0704-reportcard.aspx

    In response to the 3rd year undergraduate student, a big thank you for engaging in this discussion. Your thoughtful comments are appreciated and testament to the successful practice of using shorter articles but requiring students to think critically while reading them, to synthesize and make connections between texts.

    Having taught reading and composition primarily in the community college in both California, where I had over 40 students per section in a College Reading class, and Massachusetts, where the class size is more reasonable, at about 25 students per class, I feel the need to chime in and support the CC professor. If you teach 5 sections and have 40 students per class, there are 200 students to grade, and if every writing assignment is graded with a fine-toothed comb--let's say 20 minutes per 3 pages of writing in response to reading--you are talking about over 66 hours of grading for one assignment alone. The reality is, time is finite, and there is not enough of it. So yes, all writing assignments should be read, but some can be used primarily as scaffolding for an assignment that is graded with more attention to specific learning outcomes.

    In response to the author of this article, I appreciate some of the suggestions for getting students to do their reading. I think, in particular having students present readings to the the rest of the class, giving them leadership in reading, is a particularly effective way to enhance student motivation. I also appreciate that the author does not let students off the hook. We must require them to read their assignments. Students are very strategic, and if they are enrolled in 4 or 5 classes, work 30-40 hours per week, and are also taking care of a family, if the assigned reading does not add up to a huge percent of their grade, they will opt to not do it and take the loss. They have to make conscious decisions about what homework to do and not to do, because they are very, very busy. Well-meaning educators will try to help students by making nicely bulleted power points with all the "important" information and this adds more impetus to students' decision not to read. Why read a 40 page chapter, when all you need to do is memorize a 10 slide power point? The message of this article is not, "hey, be lazy and only grade a little." Rather, it is "make your students read and hold them accountable, because if you don't, they won't."

  • Encouraging and supporting intrinsic motivation
  • Posted by Anonymous Today on January 29, 2010 at 4:45pm EST
  • What surprises me is, for some students, a reliance on "carrot and stick" motivation. Perhaps some bring this from high school. It's only important to read if "on the test." How to foster intrinsic motivation...on top of everything else...is on the shoulders of teachers. I had a tiring week at three schools, Admittedly, I teach mainly freshmen. I first taught in 1982. I don't long for the "good old days," but there is a visible difference. I am observing this phenomenon quite early in the semester with "reader-friendly" reading, any reading. Of course not all students are like this. But it is a critical mass, sadly, and at a time when the world need to be able to foster a sharp, literate, savvy, creative, enterprising, globally aware generation. I believe that this is a profound paradox with the ubiquity of computers. Are computers de-literacizing (not a word) some of us? Do some of us expect fun and instant gratification with words...if not there, forget it?

    The word, I believe, is aliteracy.